BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0001] This invention involves an immobilized enzyme conjugate and a method of preparing
such an immobilized enzyme conjugate. It is known that enzymes, which are proteinaceous
in nature and which are commonly water soluble, act as biocatalysts which serve to
regulate many and varied chemical reactions which occur in living organisms. The enzymes
may also be isolated and used in analytical, medical and industrial applications.
For example, they find use in industrial applications in the preparation of food such
as cheese or bread as well as being used in the preparation of alcoholic beverages.
The enzyme glucose isomerase is extensively used to convert glucose to fructose in
the manufacture of high fructose corn syrup.
[0002] Since enzymes are commonly water soluble as well as being generally unstable and,
therefore, subject to deactivation, they are difficult to remove for reuse from solutions
in which they are utilized and they may not retain their catalytic activity over extended
periods of time. These difficulties lead to an increased cost in the use of enzymes
in commercial scale operations due to the necessity for frequent replacement of the
enzyme.
[0003] In order to reduce the high cost of enzyme replacement, various methods to immobilize
or insolubilize enzymes prior to their use have been devised. This immobilization
of the enzyme permits its reuse whereas it might otherwise undergo deactivation or
be lost in the reaction medium in which it is used. These immobilized enzyme systems
may be employed in various reactor systems, for example, in packed columns and stirred
tank reactors, depending on the nature of the substrate which is being biochemically
reacted.
[0004] Several general methods as well as many modifications thereof have been described
by which the immobilization of enzymes can be effected.
[0005] In U.S. patent 3,796,634 there is disclosed an immobilization method which involves
absorbing a polyamine onto the surface of colloidal sized particles, cross-linking
the polyamine with a conventional amine-reactive cross-linking agent, e.g. glutaraldehyde,
treating the resulting reaction product with NaBH
4 to reduce the aldehyde groups and thereby prevent any covalent bonding between the
aldehyde groups and the enzyme's amino group, and absorbing the enzyme onto the treated
surface of the particle at a pH such that the colloidal absorbant bears a net electric
charge opposite that of the enzyme molecules so that ionic bonding aids other non-covalent
bonding forces. This patent describes the absorbant particles as ranging in size from
about 50 to about 20,000 angstroms, preferably from about 100 to 200 angstroms in
diameter, with the absorbant material being activated charcoal, hydroxyapatite, alumina
C gamma, and betonite. This system depends on charge interactions for binding the
enzyme to the treated particles. This type of bonding is less desirable than the formation
of covalent linkages because ionic interactions are susceptible to the environmental
conditions relative to this type of linkage such as pH, ionic strength and temperature.
[0006] Liu, et al disclose an immobilization method for lactase on granular carbon in Biotechnol.
Bioeng. 17, 1695-1696, 1975 which involves absorbing p-aminophenol or 1-phenol-2-amino-4-sulfonic
acid to the carbon. These absorbed compounds provide the amino groups with which glutaraldehyde
reacts and in turn binds the enzyme. The amino group containing compounds mentioned
are monomers which possess different chemical and physical properties than those of
a polyamine such as polyethylenimine.
[0007] Another group of workers (Cho, et al, Immobilization of Enzymes on Activated Carbon:
Properties of Immobilized Glucoamylase, Glucose Oxidase and Gluconolactonase, Biotechnol.
Bioeng. 20, 1651-1665, 1978) have also immobilized enzymes on granular carbon by covalent
attachment. In this process carbon is activated by a carbodiimide which then enables
the enzyme to displace the carbodiimide and form an enzyme-carbon complex.
[0008] U.S. patent 4,141,851 (issued February 27, 1979) discloses a method for enzyme immobilization
which involves treating an inorganic porous support material such as gamma-alumina
having pore diameters of from about 100 to about 55,000 angstroms and a surface area
of about 100 to 500 m
2 per gram with a solution of a water soluble polyamine and contacting the treated
support material with a solution of a bifunctional monomeric material, e.g. glutaraldehyde.
This treatment leaves the treated support material suitable for reaction with the
enzyme so as to form covalent bonds between the enzyme and the pendant aldehyde groups.
In example II of this patent there is described the preparation of an immobilized
enzyme conjugate by treating porous alumina spheres sequentially with solutions of
polyethylenimine, glutaraldehyde and glucoamylase.
[0009] The use of activated granular carbon has received little attention as a support for
immobilized enzymes in spite of its many attractive properties and reasonable cost.
Granular carbon is used industrially for purification of syrups and other food products,-pharmaceutical
products, organic acids and various other chemicals by continuous column percolation
processes.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0010] The present invention involves a method of preparing an immobilized enzyme conjugate
which comprises the steps of:
a) contacting porous, granular, activated carbon with a solution of a polyamine compound
having pendant amine groups to cause the polyamine to attach itself to the carbon
both by absorption to its . surface and by entrapment in the pores thereof;
b) removing the water and unattached polyamine from contact with the carbon and contacting
it with an aqueous dispersion of an amine reactive which is a material multifunctional
aldehyde, a multifunctional organic halide, a multifunctional anhydride, a multifunctional
azo compound, a multifunctional isothiocyanate or a multifunctional isocyanate to
cause one of the reactive groups to react with the pendant amine groups and leave
an amine reactive group available for further reaction;
c) removing the water and unreacted amine reactive material from contact with the
carbon and contacting it with an aqueous solution of the enzyme to cause the amine
groups of the enzyme to react with the unreacted aldehyde groups by the formation
of covalent bonds therebetween to thereby immobilize the enzyme.
DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0011] The granular carbon suitable for use in the present invention will typically have
a particle size of from 12 to 40 mesh on the U.S. sieve series. Pore dimensions will
preferably range in radii from 0 0 35A to 1000A with the granular carbon support material
having a surface area of from 200 to 600 m
2/gm.
[0012] Specific examples of polyamines suitable for use in the present invention include
polyethylenediamine, a polyethylenimine such as, for example, polydiethylenetriamine,
polytriethylenetetramine, polypentaethylene-hexamine or polyhexamethylenediamine.
Other suitable polyamines are polymethylenedicyclohexylamine, polymethylenedianiline,
polytetraethylenepentamine and polyphenylenedimine. A copolymer of an epihalohydrin
and an alkylene polyamine has also been found to be suitable. While the molecular
weight of the polyamine is not deemed critical, polymers with a molecular weight range
of from 500 to 100,000 are preferred. Those polyamines which are water soluble are
applied to the carbon from their aqueous solutions whereas non-water soluble polymers
are applied from organic solvents such as methyl alcohol, ethyl alcohol, propyl alcohol,
isopropyl alcohol, t-butyl alcohol, acetone, methyl ether, ethyl ether, propyl ether,
isopropyl ether, toluene, benzene, xylene, hexane, cyclopentane and cyclohexane. Contacting
the carbon with the polyamine solution, which will normally be of a concentration
of 1 to 100 gm of polymer to liter of solvent, causes the polyamine to become attached
to the surface of the carbon particle. While a portion of the polymer would be expected
to be absorbed to the surface of the carbon particle, a major portion will be attracted
into the pores of the porous support so that the macromolecule projects out from the
pore leaving the functional groups (amino groups) available for further reaction.
This is in contrast to the method described in previously mentioned U.S. patent 3,796,634
in which carbon powder is treated with a solution of polyethylenimine to change its
surface charge and thereby allow absorption of the enzyme to the modified carrier.
This method depends on charge interaction which is much less desirable than the covalent
linkages formed in the process of this invention. The treated carbon is removed from
contact with the polyamine solution, such as by filtration, and preferably washed
with deionized (DI) water to remove any non-adhering polymer.
[0013] The polymer treated carbon is next treated with a solution of a multifunctional amine
reactive material such as glutaraldehyde; bis-diazobenzidine-2,2--disulfonic acid;
4,4'-difluoro-3,3'-dinitro- diphenylsulfone; diphenyl-4,4'-dithiocyanate-2,2'- disulfonic
acid; 3-methoxydiphenylmethane-4,4'-diisocyanate; toluene-2-isocyanate-4-isothiocyanate;
toluene-2,4-diisothiocyanate; diazobenzidine; diazobenzidine-3,3'-dianisidine; N,N'-hexamethylene
bisiodoacetamide; hexamethylene diisocyanate; cyanuric chloride and 1,5-difluoro-2,4-dimitrobenzene
by contacting it with an aqueous solution of the agent preferably contained from about
1 to 100 gm per liter of the amine reactive agent. After allowing the reaction to
proceed for a time sufficient to permit the aldehyde to derivatize the free amine
groups, the treated carbon is removed from the aldehyde solution and preferably washed
several times with deionized water. As used herein, the term "derivatize" is intended
to represent the formation of a reaction product between the amino functional group
of the polymeric molecule bound to the carbon and the amine reactive moiety of the
amine reactive agents.
[0014] Any enzyme containing an amino group capable of reacting with the amine reactive
moiety which is attached to the polymeric material entraped and absorbed in the pores
of the granular carbon can be immobilized by this method. These enzymes include, for
example, trypsin, papain, hexokinase, ficin, bromelin, lactic dehydrogenase, lactase,
glucose isomerase, glucoamylase, chymotrypsin, pronase, acylase, invertase, amylase,
glucose oxidase, pepsin, rennin and fungal protease. The derivatized carbon is mixed
with an aqueous solution of the enzyme. This can be carried out in a batch or a columnar
reactor. Removal of the carbon from the enzyme solution with subsequent water washing
provides the carbon immobilized enzyme suitable for use in biocatalytic conversions.
[0015] One of the unexpected observations of the enzyme immobilization method of this invention
is that the granular carbon becomes tougher in the sense that fewer fines are generated
by the treated particles than by those which are untreated. This property, which is
very important when considering a heterogeneous biocatalyst is illustrated by the
following experiment:
Five samples of granular carbon were treated with varying concentrations of polyethylenimine
(PEI) of from 0 to 0.5% (w/v in water). After the PEI treatment, the carbon samples
were washed and then treated with 1% glutaraldehyde (GA) (w/v water) at pH 9.0 in
0.02 M borate buffer. The samples in the glutaraldehyde solution were placed on a
rotary shaker and agitated for 4 hours. The liquid was then decanted from the carbon
and the degree of carbon fines in suspension was estimated on a relative scale of
0 to 5. A zero value represented no observed carbon fines whereas a value of 5 represented
a suspension of carbon fines which was completely opaque. The following table summarizes
the degree of carbon fines generated during the agitation.

[0016] The protective coating or layer that apparently forms on the granular carbon particle
is seen to be dependent on the amount of PEI present. Not only does this process fix
enzymes to carbon particles, it also strengthens the carbon particle to reduce its
degradation.
[0017] Another unique feature of this immobilization process is that previously used granular
carbon can be reused for immobilization after regeneration by a simple process involving
a base-acid wash. This property of the process is significant because it eliminates
any disposal problem for the user and provides a potential economic savings as well.
This regeneration potential is exemplified by an experiment in which granular carbon
having enzyme immobilized to it by the PEI-GA process was dried and regenerated as
follows:
1. Slurried 50 ml dry carbon complex in DI water and washed with several volumes of
DI water.
2. Decanted the water and added 250 ml of 0.5 N NaOH, mixed several minutes and let
stand 1 hour.
3. Decanted the alkaline solution, and washed the carbon with copious quantity of
water.
4. After decanting the water, 250 ml of 0.5 N HC1 was added, mixed several minutes
and then allowed to stand for 1 hour.
5. Decanted acid and washed with copious amounts of water until the pH of the wash
water was 3.6.
[0018] The carbon regenerated in this manner was then used to immobilize glucoamylase by
the PEI-GA method. An activity of 110 units/ml of carbon was obtained which agrees
very well with the 130 units/ ml obtained by using a fresh quantity of granular carbon
for immobilization.
[0019] The immobilization procedure produces a linkage between the enzyme and the polymer
absorbed to the granular carbon that is unusually stable, and it has been found that
the carbon particle does not become coated and fouled by proteins or other substances
when a crude solution of liquefied corn starch is passed through a bed of the immobilized
enzyme.
[0020] The present invention is further illustrated by the following examples in which all
mesh sizes are based on the U.S. standard sieve series.
Example I
Immobilization of Amyloglucosidase on PEI-Derivatized Granular Carbon
[0021] Prior to use for immobilization, the carbon was acid washed as follows:
1. 100 ml of -20+40 mesh activated granular carbon (Darco) was mixed with concentrated
hydrochloric acid and allowed to stand at room temperature for several hours. Enough
acid was used to completely immerse the carbon.
2. A large quantity of deionized water was then added to the carbon slurry and decanted
after the carbon settled.
3. The water wash of step 2 was repeated several times.
4. The carbon was transferred to a glass column (2.6 X 70 cm) and water was perculated
through the bed until the effluent reached pH 3.5.
5. The carbon was then removed from the column and stored in water at room temperature.
[0022] Glucoamylase was immobilized at room temperature by the following procedure:
1. 100 ml of a 4% solution of PEI-600 (Dow, polyethylenimine molecular weight range
40,000-60,000) was added to 10 ml of acid washed granular carbon in a 250 ml round
bottom flask, and gently stirred for several hours.
2. The polyamine was then decanted and the carbon washed with copious amounts of water.
3. The immobilized amino groups absorbed on the carbon were derivatized with glutaraldehyde
by 200 ml of a 1% glutaraldehyde solution adjusted to pH 9.0. The reaction was allowed
to continue for 18 hours while maintaining the pH at 9.0.
4. The glutaraldehyde solution was decanted and the carbon'washed with water to remove
unreacted glutaraldehyde.
5. 100 ml of glucoamylase (AG, 2.5 ml of Diazyme L-100, Miles Laboratories, Inc.)
solution adjusted to pH 7.0 with dilute NaOH(2 N) was added to the derivatized carbon.
With gentle stirring for several hours, the pH of the reaction mixture was kept at
7.0.
6. The enzyme solution was decanted and the immobilized enzyme was washed with water.
[0023] The activity and stability of the immobilized enzyme was determined by assaying it
several times in a recirculation differential reactor as described by Ford, et al
in Enzyme Engineering, Ed. Wingard, Jr., L.B., Pp. 267, John Willey & Sons, New York
(1972). The assay was conducted at 50°C using as substrate Maltrin-15 [a low DE (15-18)
corn starch obtained from Grain Processing Co., Muscatine, Iowa] in .02 M acetate
buffer at pH 4.2. To carry out the assay, the substrate is placed in a reservoir and
the amount of glucose formed is estimated by the Glucostrate Method (General Diagnostics)
whereby the initial velocity of glucose formed per minute is determined from regression
analysis. A unit of activity represents the amount of enzyme that forms one u mole
of glucose per minute under the experimental conditions.
[0024] The enzyme was assayed 3 consecutive times with fresh substrate and with a buffer
(.02 M acetate, pH 4.2) wash between each assay to determine the stability of the
activity. The following results indicate that AG is immobilized on the derivatized
carbon and summarizes its activity.

Example II
Immobilization of Bacterial Alpha-Amylase on PEI Derivatized Carbon
[0025] A 5 ml quantity of PEI-glutaraldehyde derivatized granular carbon as in example I
was used to immobilize bacterial alpha-amylase (Taka-Therm®, Miles Laboratories, Inc.).
The enzyme solution used for treating the derivatized carbon consisted of 1 ml Taka-Therm
diluted to 50 ml with water. The immobilization procedure was carried out as described
in example I. The resulting immobilized preparation, after being washed with buffer,
(.02 M acetate containing 10 mM CaCl
2, pH 6.0) was assayed in the differential reactor using as substrate 4% soluble starch
in .02 M acetate buffer at pH 6.0 containing 10 mM CaCl
2. The degree of starch hydrolysis was determined by measuring the amount of reducing
groups formed by the ferricyanide method described by Ghuysen, et al in Methods in
Enzymology, Vol. VIII, Pp. 685, Academic Press, New York, 1966, in which glucose was
used as the reference. The immobilized alpha-amylase activity was estimated at 11.7
and 9.5 units per ml of immobilized enzyme respectively for consecutive assays.
Example III
Fungal Alpha-Amylase Immobilized on PEI Derivatized Granular Carbon
[0026] Fungal alpha-amylase was immobilized on derivatized carbon as described in example
II. A 50 ml enzyme solution containing .1 gm of Sumizyme LP-8 fungal alpha-amylase
(908 MMU/mg) adjusted to pH 7.0 was used to treat 5 ml of PEI-glutaraldehyde derivatized
carbon. The activity of the immobilized preparation was measured as described in example
II except that 1% Martrin-10 was used as the substrate. An activity of 5.2 and 5.5
units per ml of immobilized enzyme was obtained for consecutive assays. A unit of
activity represents the amount of reducing group formed as measured by the ferricyanide
method as a µ mole of glucose per minute.
Example IV
Soy Beta-Amylase Immobilized on PEI-Glutaraldehyde Derivatized Granular Carbon
[0027] The procedure described in example II was used to immobilize soy beta-amylase. A
50 ml enzyme solution (.1 gm of a lyophilized sample, 182 units/gm) adjusted to pH
7.0 was used to treat 5 ml of the PEI-derivatized carbon. The immobilized enzyme preparation
was assayed in the differential reactor using the conditions of the assay in example
II. Consecutive assays of 2.o and 2.4 units per ml of immobilized enzyme were obtained.
Example V
Malt Amylase Immobilized on PEl-Glutaraldehyde Derivatized Granular Carbon
[0028] A 100 ml solution of malt amylase pH 7.0 (.2 gm, Mylase-Wallerstain Lab) was used
to treat 10 ml of PEI derivatized granular carbon by the procedure described in example
II. The immobilized enzyme preparation was assayed in the differential reactor as
described in example II using the 4% soluble starch for the substrate. An activity
of 1.8 units per ml of immobilized enzyme was obtained. It should be noted that with
many of the assays with granular carbon, substrate and product absorption may influence
the actual rates as described by Cho, et al in Biotechnol. Bioeng., 20:1651 (1978).
Example VI
Wheat Beta-Amylase Immobilized on PEI-Glutaraldehyde Derivatized Granular Carbon
[0029] A 0.2 gm quantity of wheat beta-amylase (lyophilized powder 140 MMU/mg) in 100 ml
of DI water (pH 7.0) was used to treat 10 ml of PEI-glutaraldehyde derivatized carbon
using the procedure described in example II. The activity of this preparation was
estimated at 1.6 units per ml of immobilized enzyme using 4% soluble starch at pH
6.0 as the substrate in the differential reactor.
Example VII
Pullulanase Immobilized on PEI-Glutaraldehyde Derivatized Granular Carbon
[0030] Pullulanase was immobilized in a manner similar to the procedure described in example
VII by treating 10 ml of derivatized carbon with 100 ml of a pH 7.0 solution of pullulanase
prepared by dissolving 0.2 gm of pullulanase (A.B.M. Chemicals Ltd., Sample K1000)
in 100 ml of DI water. The activity of the enzyme preparation was estimated in the
recirculation differential reactor at 50°C using as substrate 0.2% pullulan in .02
M acetate buffer at pH 5.5. The extent of the digestion of pullulan was determined
by the appearance of reducing groups. The reducing groups were estimated by the ferricyanide
method using glucose as the reference. The production of reducing groups was plotted
as a function of time and from the plot it was estimated that in 15 minutes of reaction,
15% of the pullulan was digested.
Example VIII
Glucose Isomerase Immobilized on PEI-Glutaraldehyde Derivatized Granular Carbon
[0031] Soluble glucose isomerase (GI) was obtained by treating washed cells of Streptomyces
olivaceus with dilute detergent (.1% Lubrol WX) and centrifuging to remove cell debris.
A 100 ml quantity of soluble GI at pH 7.0 containing 2 units of activity per ml (unit
= umole of fructose/min.) was used to treat 10 ml of derivatized granular carbon as
described in example II. The activity was estimated at 2.2 units per ml of immobilized
enzyme in the differential reactor at 60° using a substrate containing 2 M glucose,
4.1 mM MgSO
4·7 H
2O, 2.4 mM NaHSO
3 and 20 mM tris-maleate buffer pH 8.0. The amount of fructose formed was determined
by the cysteine-H
2S0
4 method.
Example IX
Fungal Lactase Immobilized on PEI-Glutaraldehyde Derivatized Granular Carbon
[0032] Fungal lactase was immobilized on derivatized granular carbon by the procedure described
in example II except that the 1% glutaraldehyde solution was buffered with .05 M borate
at pH 9.0 and the enzyme solution was buffered with .05 M sodium phosphate at pH 7.0.
Lactase solution (50 ml of .1 gm Miles Laboratories, Inc. fungal lactase, 14,280 FCCLU/gm)
was used to treat 10 ml of PEI-derivatized carbon. The activity of the enzyme preparation
was measured at 55°C in the differential reactor using as substrate .15 M lactose
in .02 M acetate buffer, pH 4.5. The breakdown of lactose was monitored by the amount
of glucose formed as determined by the Glucostrate method. The activity was estimated
at 38 units/ml of immobilized enzyme.
Example X
Influence of the Molecular Size of PEI on Immobilizing Amyloglucosidase
[0033] In the preceeding examples, only 1 type of polyamine (Dow PEI-600., molecular weight
range 40,000-60,000) was derivatized on granular carbon. In this example other molecular
weight PEI's were used to determine the influence on enzyme binding. For this experiment,
50 ml solutions of 1% PEI-18 (1,800 MW), 2% PEI-200 (20,000-30,000 MW) and 1% PEI-600
(40,000-60,000 MW) were used to treat 10 ml of acid washed granular carbon. The procedure
for derivatizing the carbon was similar to that described in example I except that
the glutaraldehyde solution was buffered with .05 M borate at pH 9.0. Also the AG
solution (2 ml Miles Diazyme L-100 diluted to 50 ml) was buffered with .05 M phosphate
at pH 7.0.
[0034] The enzyme activity of the preparations were determined in the recirculation differential
reactor as described in example I. The following table summarizes the activity.

[0035] These results indicate that a wide molecular weight range of PEI can be used to immobilize
enzyme, but the size of the polyamine molecule influences the amount of enzyme immobilized.
The size of the PEI molecule to which the enzyme is bound may also influence the product
profile obtained from liquefied starch digestion through a steric or mass transport
phenomenia.
Example XI
Immobilization of AG on Betz 1180-Glutaraldehyde Derivatized Granular Carbon
[0036] In this example, another type of polyamine was used in place of polyethylenimine
to immobilized AG. For this experiment, Betz 1180 was used as the polyamine. This
polymer, which is marketed under the tradename Betz 1180 by Betz Laboratories, Inc.,
Trevose, Pennsylvania, is a water soluble cationic polymer obtained by the polymerization
of an epihalohydrin with an alkylene polyamine. It has a molecular weight of less
than 1 million, contains about 0.288 millimoles of amino groups per gram of solution
(based on ninhydrin assay) and is marketed as a solution containing 30 weight percent
solids, based on total solution weight. A more detailed description of this polymer
and its preparation can be found in U.S. patents Nos. 3,915,904 and 3,953,330. The
steps of polyamine absorption, amino group activation and enzyme immobilization were
similar to that described in example I. The activity of the preparation was assayed
as in example I at 236 units/ml of immobilized enzyme. This example demonstrates that
polyamines other than polyethylenimine having pendant amine groups are suitable for
use in this invention.
Example XII
Immobilization of Glucose Is'omerase on Double PEI-Derivatized Granular Carbon
[0037] The distance between the immobilized enzyme and the support, and the flexibility
of the immobilized enzyme with respect to the support can be altered by reacting a
polyamine in place of the enzyme to the absorbed derivatized polyamine, followed by
derivatizing the new polyamine with glutaraldehyde for enzyme immobilization. This
technique was tried by first absorbing a polyamine (PEI or Betz 1180) on acid washed
granular carbon; secondly reacting the amino groups with glutaraldehyde; thirdly covalently
binding a polyamine to the aldehyde group of glutaraldehyde; fourthly activating the
amino group with glutaraldehyde and finally immobilizing the enzyme.
[0038] Experimental conditions were similar to those described in example XI for the polyamine
and glutaraldehyde steps, except for the second polyamine treatment, in which the
polyamine was made up in .05 M borate buffer at pH 9.0. Four samples were prepared
using combinations of PEI-600 and Betz 1180. The enzyme used for immobilization was
GI described in example VIII. The activities of the samples prepared are listed in
the following table using the assay method described in example VIII.

[0039] The activity of all the preparations are more active than the GI immobilized in example
VIII. It is possible that this method of immobilization may have increased the enzyme
loading on the carbon particle, compared to the 2.2 units/ml of immobilized enzyme
for the PEI-derivatized carbon used in example VIII.
Example XIII
Preparative Technique of Immobilization of AG on Betz 1180 Derivatized Carbon
[0040] All of the previous examples of enzyme immobilization were done in a batch-wise fashion.
This example gives the results of immobilizing AG on a 300 ml volume of support using
a column technique.
[0041] Procedure (all steps at room temperature)
1. 300 ml of Darco 20/40 mesh activated granular carbon soaked in concentrated HC1
for several hours.
2. Excess HC1 decanted and the carbon washed with copious amounts of DI water.
3. Transferred carbon to 2.6 X 70 cm glass column and continued washing by perculating
water through the bed until the effluent pH reached 3.9.
4. A 2 liter solution of polyamine (40 gm Betz 1180 diluted with DI water) was then
perculated through the bed. After all the solution was passed through the bed, the
solution was recycled upflow through the bed for 4 hours.
5. Excess polyamine was then washed from the carbon by washing with 4 liters of water
(upflow).
6. 1.5 liters of 1% glutaraldehyde in .02 M borate buffer pH 9.0 was then perculated
through the bed and then recycled upflow for about 16 hours.
7. Excess glutaraldehyde was then washed from the carbon with water in a manner similar
to step 5.
8. 1.5 liters of enzyme solution (60 ml of Diazyme) in .02 M phosphate buffer pH 7.0
was perculated through the bed and then recycled upflow for about 5 hours.
9. The excess enzyme was then washed from the bed as described in step 5.
10. About 7 liters of .02 M citrate buffer pH 4.2 was then perculated through the
bed over a period of about 18 hours, the pH of the effluent was then 4.2.
11. The immobilized enzyme preparation was removed from the column and stored in .02
M citrate buffer at pH 4.2.
[0042] The activity of the immobilized AG preparation estimated in the differential reactor
as described in example I was 236 units per ml of immobilized enzyme. As indicated
by this experiment, scale up to large quantities does not offer any inherent problems
in immobilization.
Example XIV
[0043] In this comparative example, additional experiments are described in which alumina
and carbon are compared as supports for the immobilization of enzymes. Physical properties
of the supports are summarized in the following table I. Several different parameters
are compared.
[0044] In one experiment, amyloglucosidase (AG) was immobilized to the 2 support materials
(alumina and carbon) using PEI/glutaraldehyde under identical conditions. Since one
of the important properties of carbon is that it can be regenerated by a base-acid
wash, both supports were subjected to a mild acid-base treatment prior to immobilization
of the enzyme. For these experiments, the support material was mixed with the acid
or base on a shaker for about 2 hours and then allowed to stand overnight. The reagent
was then decanted, and the support was washed with large quantities of water prior
to its treatment in the immobilization process. The results of these experiments are
summarized in table Ia.

The results summarized in table Ia show that with no prior treatment of the support,
the carbon is more efficient in binding all the enzyme. Alumina is apparently more
specific in its binding leaving approximately 50% of the enzyme unbound. Acid treatment
of alumina apparently alters the structure of alumina in such a way that the binding
capacity of this support is reduced as evidenced by the greater amount of activity
remaining unbound and by the lower immobilized activity (units/ml). Treatment of alumina
with a base, however, has little effect. Acid or base treatment of carbon can be seen
to have essentially no influence on the binding characteristics of carbon. These results
demonstrate the fundamental difference as to the relative binding properties and inertness
of the support to a mild acid or base treatment.
[0045] Another series of experiments were conducted to evaluate the action profile of immobilized
AG and its stability on both supports on digesting liquefied corn starch. The AG was
immobilized on both supports without prior acid or base treatment.

Table 2 summarizes the enzyme distribution during the immobilization process. Column
reactors (100 X 1.5 cm glass jacket columns) were used to prepare columns containing
equivalent amounts of each immobilized enzyme. For this experiment the columns consisted
of a 10 ml bed of AG bound to carbon and a 30 ml bed of AG bound to alumina. Both
columns were fed 25 DE (dextrose equivalent) unrefined alpha-amylase liquefied corn
flour adjusted to 23% DS and containing 250 ppm S0
2 buffered with 5 mM citrate at pH 4.2. The substrate was perculated through the beds
at a constant flow rate at about 10 ml per hour. The columns were maintained at a
constant temperature by circulating 50°.water through the column jacket. To determine
the degree of digestion, the carbohydrate profile was obtained by subjecting the column
effluent periodically to HPLC separation. The carbohydrate profiles of the digests
by AG bound to the alumina and carbon are summarized in tables 3 and 4, respectively.
Also in these tables the nominal reaction time and DE values are given. The nominal
reaction times were longer for the AG bound to alumina because of its larger bed volume.
The carbohydrate profiles are strikingly different even though.both enzyme beds have
identical units of activity (based on initial activity).

From tables 3 and 4 it can be determined that AG immobilized to carbon digested the
liquefied starch more completely as evidenced by the greater proportion of DP
1, low DP
2 and DP
3 oligosaccharides, and the complete digestion of the DP
4, DP
S and DP
6, oligosaccharides. Also the >DP
6 fraction is substantially lower for the AG immobilized on carbon as compared to the
AG immobilized to alumina. The higher levels of disaccharides (DP
Z) and the intermediate oligosaccharides (DP
3 through DP
6) and the low level of glucose in the effluent from the AG- alumina column indicates
an apparent loss in activity or the presence of some sort of mass transport phenomena
causing the apparent loss of enzyme activity.
[0046] To quantitate the apparent loss of activity or some inability of AG bound to alumina
to digest starch as effectively as AG bound to carbon, the activity can be expressed
as µ moles of glucose formed/minute/ml of enzyme computed from the results given in
tables 3 and 4. The activities are summarized in tables 5 and 6 for both immobilized
enzymes. The activity results were also normalized to dimensionless activity by dividing
the observed activity from the column digests by the initial velocity activity obtained
by assaying the immobilized enzyme in the shaker bath using Maltrin 15 as a substrate.
The dimensionless activity of AG bound to carbon is almost twice the dimensionless
activity of AG bound to alumina.

Comparing the dimensionless activity from the results of both immobilized forms of
AG is a relatively crude estimate since the conversion of both columns were not similar.
However, the wide variation in the dimensionless activity indicates a fundamental
difference of the immobilized form of AG in digesting Maltrin 15 (15 DE) and to convert
a liquefied corn starch (25 DE). The conclusion one can draw from these results is
that AG bound to carbon can digest small chained oligosaccharide to glucose more readily
than AG bound to alumina. This suggests that the AG bound to carbon is relatively
more free than the AG bound to alumina.
[0047] Both forms of immobilized AG appear to be quite stable as indicated by table I. It
is interesting to note that initially the AG bound to carbon lost some apparent activity
up to about 50 hours of operation and then reached a steady state through 400 hours
of operation. AG bound to alumina resulted in an apparent increase in activity during
the initial 50 hours of operation suggesting some sort of mass transport resistance.
The data in table 1 indicate that after an apparent steady state, AG bound to alumina
was about 20% of that expressed by AG bound to carbon.
[0048] From these experiments it has been demonstrated that under identical conditions,
carbon binds more AG (77.3 units/ml) than alumina (25.7 units/ml). AG bound to carbon
appears to be less affected by the influence of mass transfer resistance than AG bound
to alumina since AG bound to carbon digests liquefied corn starch more completely
than AG bound to alumina. It has also been demonstrated that carbon is stable to both
acid and base treatment, whereas alumina is stable to base treatment but liable to
acid treatment. The stability of a support to both acid and base is necessary for
the regeneration of the support to be reused for enzyme immobilization. Together these
results clearly illustrate that carbon and alumina, when used as a support for immobilizing
enzymes by the PEI-glutaraldehyde method, are quite different.
1. A method of preparing an immobilized enzyme conjugate which comprises the steps
of:
a) contacting porous, granular, activated carbon with a solution of a polyamine compound
having pendant amine groups to cause the polyamine to attach itself to the carbon
both by absorption to its surface and by entrapment in the pores thereof;
b) removing the water and any unattached polyamine dispersed therein from contact
with the carbon and contacting it with an aqueous dispersion solution of an amine
reactive material which is a multifunctional organic halide, a multifunctional anhydride,
a multifunctional azo compound, a multifunctional isothiocyanate or a multifunctional
isocyanate to cause one of the reactive groups to react with the pendant amine groups
and leave an amine reactive moiety available for further reaction;
c) removing the water and any unreacted amine reactive material dispersed therein
from contact with the carbon and contacting the carbon with an aqueous solution of
the enzyme to be immobilized to cause the amine groups of the enzyme to react with
the unreacted amine reactive moiety by the formation of covalent bonds therebetween
to thereby immobilize the enzyme.
2. The method of claim 1 wherein the carbon has a particle size of from 12 to 40 mesh
on the U.S. sieve series, pore dimensions of from 35 to 1000 A in radius and a surface
area of from 200 to 600 m2/gm.
3. The method of claim I wherein the polyamine is selected from the group of polyethylenediamine,
a polyethylenimine, polyhexamethylene-diamine, polymethylenedicyclohexylamine, polymethylenedianiline,
polytetraethylenepentamine, and polyphenylenediamine.
4. The method of claim 3 wherein the polyethylenimine is polydiethylenetriamine, polytriethylenetetramine,
polypentaethylene-hexamine or polyhexamethylenediamine.
S. The method of claim 1 wherein the polyamine is a copolymer of an epihalohydrin
and an alkylene polyamine.
6. The method of claim 1 wherein the polyamine has a molecular weight range of from
500 to 100,000.
7. The method of claim 1 wherein the amine reactive material is bis-diazobenzidine-2,2'-disulfonic
acid; 4,4'-difluoro-3,3'-dinitrodiphenylsulfone; diphenyl-4,4'-dithiocyanate-2,2'-disulfonic
acid; 3-methoxydiphenylmethane-4,4'-diisocyanate; toluene-2-isocyanate-4-isothiocyanate,
toluene-2,4-diisothiocyanate; diazobenzidine; diazobenzidine-3,3'-dianisidine; N,N'-hexamethylene
bisiodoacetamide; hexamethylene diisocyanate; cyanuric chloride or 1,5-difluoro-2,4-dinitrobenzene.
8. The method of claim 1 or 3 wherein the amine reactive material is glutaraldehyde.
9. The method of claim 1 wherein the enzyme is glucoamylase.
10. An immobilized enzyme conjugate comprising porous, granular, activated carbon
as a support having attached thereto the reaction product of a polyamine compound
having pendant amine groups, an amine reactive material which is a multifunctional
aldehyde, a multifunctional organic halide, a multifunctional azo compound, a multifunctional
isothiocyanate or a multifunctional isocyanate reactive whose unreacted amine groups
have been reacted with free amine groups of the enzyme to bind it thereto.